US President Donald Trump’s visit is approaching with giant steps, accompanied by the occasional coalition commotion: The mud wrestling between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Bayit Yehudi leader Naftali Bennett, which is pushing the White House into a formula it hasn’t declared—united Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.
What have we come up with this time? Jerusalem—the Jewish people’s eternal capital—a sensitive, high, challenging and divisive issue. Is there indeed one, united Jerusalem? Jerusalem just as the location of the US embassy? Jerusalem as the promising card in an election? An indivisible Jerusalem, which will perpetuate the “assertion” that there is no partner, as the Palestinians can’t accept it?
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In my previous article about a month ago, I argued that if we failed to select our major cards by presenting a plan for a peace agreement, Trump would deal the cards as he pleased. In the meantime, it seems that instead of offering our program, we are trying to make Trump keep his election promise to move the American embassy and declare that United Jerusalem is Israel’s capital—a declaration which exceeds that promise. His decision to visit the Western Wall without Netanyahu should make it clear to any sensible person that he has no intention of declaring that United Jerusalem is Israel’s capital.
Trump has a way of keeping his promise without binding himself to what Bennett and Netanyahu are trying to impose on him. Moving the embassy to Jerusalem—yes; Jerusalem as Israel’s capital—yes; a united Jerusalem—no. Trump’s escape, with the lack of any other offer that the Palestinians can accept, is a US embassy for Israel in West Jerusalem and a US embassy for Palestine in East Jerusalem.
United Jerusalem was not Israel’s capital until the annexation after 1967. It selected in advance as Israel’s capital. Not because of its sacredness (it didn’t have a temple when King David chose it), but because it was a territory outside the lands of the hawkish tribes—Judah (David’s tribe) and Benjamin (the tribe of King Saul, who ruled the rest of Israel’s tribes). Just like Washington in the United States, thousands of years later, which is a territory outside the states that make up the US.
The unification of Jerusalem, which included dozens of Palestinian villages and neighborhoods that never belonged to it, created a difficult situation. At least 40 percent of the people who have the right to vote in the municipal elections are Palestinian; a failure to return to a Jewish Jerusalem will lead to a situation in which the election of an Arab mayor in Jerusalem depends only on the Palestinians’ ability to bring their voters to the polling stations. This problem, which created with the annexation of Palestinian territory and population to Jerusalem, is similar to the problem that will develop in the future if we repeat our mistake and annex the Judea and Samaria lands with their population.
Returning the Palestinian villages and neighborhoods which included in Jerusalem to the area designated for Palestine, as the basis for Palestinian Jerusalem. Or al-Quds, as the Muslim call it since it became holy in their eyes. And free access to ritual and religious activity for the three religions’ Holy Basin, are the solution that should be proposed to Trump before the 1967 borders principle is applied to Jerusalem as well by a stubborn president who is looking for a deal. This solution is a better for Jerusalem, which will regain its Jewish majority, and it’s the right thing for the implementation of a deal Trump is looking for Jerusalem.
By Ynet News